2017 Annual Meeting
Surface Engineering of Nanostructured Electrodes and Electrolytes for Solid-State Battery Applications
Incorporating nanotechnology processes into the lithium ion battery system has helped enhance the performance of several lithium ion battery chemistries. Nanostructuring a lithium ion batteryâs anode and cathode allows for vastly increased electrode surface area available for the battery system, thereby reducing the impact of interfacial impedance. High surface area nanostructured electrodes can be produced by using an RF magnetron sputter coater to deposit the electrode material onto a nanoporous Anodized Aluminum Oxide (AAO) membrane with nanopores of 200 nm in diameter. This research uses a nanostructured SnO2 anode against a bulk LiCoO2 cathode and a polyethylene-oxide (PEO) based solid polymer electrolyte. The electrolyte is similarly nanostructured by confining it in the nanopores of an AAO membrane. By melting a film of the electrolyte onto an AAO membrane under vacuum, the polymer is forced into the AAO nanopores, forming a nanocomposite electrolyte membrane. The confinement of the electrolyte increases its ionic conductivity to levels comparable to liquid electrolytes.
A functioning room-temperature solid-state lithium ion cell has been developed using the nanostructured SnO2 anode, LiCoO2 cathode, and PEO nanocomposite electrode. The cell was investigated using galvanostatic cell cycling and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The cell achieved a specific discharge capacity of 125 mAh/g (89% of theoretical capacity) and a capacity retention of 20% after 20 cycles.